Pubdate: Sat, 20 Jun 1998 Source: Orange County Register (CA) Contact: http://www.ocregister.com/ Author:Diana Jean Schemo - The New York Times COLOMBIA TO TEST COCA HERBICIDE DRUGS: The U.S. made weed killer can be dropped from higher altitudes,boosting pilot safety, but its maker opposes this use. Bogota, Colombia - Bowing to demands from Washington, the Colombian government has agreed to test a granular herbicide to kill coca crops,despite public warnings from the chemical's U.S. manufacturer against its use in Colombia. In the United States, the herbicide, tebuthiuron, is used mostly to control weeds on railroad beds and under high-voltage lines far from food crops and people. The Environmental Protection Agency requires a warning label on the chemical that says it could contaminate ground water,a side effect Colombian environmental officials fear could prevent peasants from growing where coca once grew. U.S. officials have decided to concentrate more heavily on treating illegal drug crops with chemicals, particularly in parts of southern Colombia under the control of leftist guerrillas. Those guerrillas have fired on aircraft attempting to spray herbicides on coca crops. But tebuthiuron can be dropped instead of sprayed, making the task easier under such conditions. The increase in fumigation comes at the expense of other measures to control drug smuggling, a recent U.S. government investigation concluded. U.S. and Colombian police officials say a granular herbicide will be more effective in the battle to control drugs. For four years, they have used a liquid toxin, glifosate, that has destroyed only 30 percent of the plants sprayed. Despite the effort, the amount of coca in Colombia has yet to decline, because eradication has prompted farmers to move and plant coca elsewhere. Last year, Colombia became the world's leading coca grower. U.S. and Colombia authorities also contend that tebuthiuron offers greater protection from gunfire for pilots, who must now fly low to fumigate in the early morning hours, when winds are calm and temperatures are lower. Tebuthiuron pellets can be dropped from higher altitudes in virtually any weather, making pilots less vulnerable to gunfire, police officials here said. Washington has lobbied Andean governments to accept tebuthiuron for more than a decade, even though the chemical's manufacturer, Dow AgroSciences, a subsidiary of Dow Chemical Co., strongly opposes its use in Colombia. "Tebuthiuron is not labeled for use on any crops in Colombia, and it is our desire that the product not be used for coca eradication as well," the company said in a statement. Tebuthiuron granules, sold commercially as Spike 20P, should be used "carefully and in controlled situations," Dow cautioned, because "it can be very risky in situations where terrain has slopes, rainfall is significant, desirable plants are nearby and application is made under less than ideal circumstances." The warning is a rough description of conditions in Colombia's coca-growing regions. Dow, which faced years of lawsuits and public protest over the use of its Agent Orange defoliant during the Vietnam war, said that if approached, it would refuse to sell tebuthiuron for use in Colombia. However, U.S. officials note that Dow's patent on the chemical has expired, allowing others to make it legally. Critics in Colombia, including Eduardo Verano, the nation's environmental minister, say the health effects of tebuthiuron on farming areas are unknown, and its use will only increase deforestation by pushing coca growers deeper into forest. "We need to reconsider the benefits of the chemical war," said Verano. "The more you fumigate, the more the farmers plant. If you fumigate one hectare, they'll grow coca on two more. How else do you explain the figures?" U.S. officials, backed by Colombian police, maintain that the benefits outweigh the environmental risks. The liquid herbicide used now, at a cost of millions of dollars to the United States, has mostly been washed away in the heavy rainfall of the Amazon, said Luiz Eduardo Parra, environmental auditor of Colombia's anti-narcotics squad. The U.S. ambassador to Colombia, Curtis Kamman, said, "For a net environmental positive effect, getting rid of coca is the best course for Colombia." Research in Hawaii, Panama and Peru by the U.S. Agriculture Department concluded that tebuthiuron would persist in Colombian soil for less than a year. Where once the United States concentrated on arresting drug barons, smashing their organizations and seizing their wealth, the new strategy involves greater fumigation and the interception of boats that may be carrying drugs or chemicals needed to make cocaine from the coca. In March, the State Department's acting assistant secretary of state for international narcotics and law enforcement affairs, Rand Beers, outlined a plan to increase fumigation in the southern provinces of Caqueta and Putumayo, and asked Congress to pump $21 million more into the $30 million counter-narcotics budget for Colombia this year. He said drug traffickers made a strategic decision to grow coca in southern Colombia because of U.S. success in blocking Peruvian drug planes that fly raw paste to Colombia, where it is made into cocaine. The United States must seize the opportunity to prevent Colombian-grown coca from taking its place, he told Congress. But U.S. intelligence analysts say these statements exaggerate the victory at intercepting drug planes, and that coca base is still reaching Colombia from Bolivia and Peru. According to U.S. government figures, 78 percent of the cocaine leaving Colomia is made from coca grown elsewhere. The General Accounting Office, in a February report, concluded that a dramatic increase in coca fumigation and drug interception in Colombia was ill planned, and shortchanged other anti-naracotics programs. - ---